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Liberia news

UK-Liberia relations “very important”

The United Kingdom (UK) Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson, has described bilateral relations with Liberia as “very important.”


As the first foreign secretary to visit Liberia in a very long time, Mr. Johnson said his visit here was a big opportunity to intensify the friendship and partnership, noting that Britain was the first country to recognize Liberia’s independence in 1848. “Those are the foundations of a relationship that we want to grow from strength to strength,” he said.

A Foreign Ministry release said, the UK foreign secretary made the assertion when he stopped over at the Roberts International Airport and held bilateral discussions with a number of Liberian government officials including Foreign Minister MarjonKamara, Public Works Minister Gyude Moore, Commerce and Industry Minister Axel Addy and the head of the President’s Delivery Unit, Clarence Moniba on Wednesday, February 15, 2017.

Mr. Johnson, who was making his first trip to Africa as the UK’s foreign secretary, stopped over en route to the UK following visits to Sierra Leone and the Gambia. He said his stopover was to see the transformation taking place here, meet with government authorities to see how the UK can be supportive of the country’s continued development efforts specifically infrastructure, power generation and moving Liberia higher up the value chain. He also highlighted how his government can be supportive to the upcoming presidential and legislative elections later this year.

Touching on his discussions with Liberian government officials, the UK foreign secretary termed the discussions as “very valuable” understanding the country’s huge potential. “This is a country which has been through a terrible civil war in recent memory but is firmly out of that and is bouncing back like Liberian rubber,” he joked.

For her part, Foreign Minister MarjonKamara described Mr. Johnson’s visit as a “very good” one. She said though his visit here was quite short and unexpected, his time in Liberia was spent constructively where officials discussed with him government’s priorities and the opportunities for UK partnership and investment in key priority areas including infrastructure, energy, road construction, among others.

“We hope to see an increase in their (UK) interest,” she said, noting that Mr. Johnson confirmed that the UK Government through the Department for International Development (DFID) is already committed to contributing to Liberia’s reconstruction fund. “We look forward to quick decisions on those issues that are already before the UK Government,” foreign minister Kamara indicated.

She noted that the UK foreign minister’s visit was significant in further strengthening bilateral relations with a positive impact considering an opportunity to personally meet each other and confer. “It should help them reach decision points on many of the issues,” foreign minister Kamara emphasized.
During his stopover, UK foreign secretary Johnson also visited the Firestone Natural Rubber Company (Firestone Liberia) near the Roberts International Airport.

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